A topological spaceX is said to be n-connected when it is non-empty, path-connected, and its first nhomotopy groups vanish identically, that is where denotes the i-th homotopy group and 0 denotes the trivial group. The requirements of being non-empty and path-connected can be interpreted as -connected and 0-connected, respectively, which is useful in defining 0-connected and 1-connected maps, as below. The 0-th homotopy set can be defined as: This is only a pointed set, not a group, unlessX is itself a topological group; the distinguished point is the class of the trivial map, sending S0 to the base point of X. Using this set, a space is 0-connected if and only if the 0th homotopy set is the one-point set. The definition of homotopy groups and this homotopy set require that X be pointed, which cannot be done if X is empty. A topological space X is path-connected if and only if its 0-th homotopy group vanishes identically, as path-connectedness implies that any two points x1 and x2 in X can be connected with a continuous path which starts in x1 and ends in x2, which is equivalent to the assertion that every mapping from S0 to X can be deformed continuously to a constant map. With this definition, we can define X to be n-connected if and only if
Examples
A spaceX is -connected if and only if it is non-empty.
A space X is 0-connected if and only if it is non-empty and path-connected.
The corresponding relative notion to the absolute notion of an n-connected space is an n-connected map, which is defined as a map whose homotopy fiberFf is an -connected space. In terms of homotopy groups, it means that a map is n-connected if and only if:
is an isomorphism for, and
is a surjection.
The last condition is frequently confusing; it is because the vanishing of the -st homotopy group of the homotopy fiberFf corresponds to a surjection on the nth homotopy groups, in the exact sequence: If the group on the right vanishes, then the map on the left is a surjection. Low-dimensional examples:
A connected map is one that is onto path components ; this corresponds to the homotopy fiber being non-empty.
A simply connected map is one that is an isomorphism on path components and onto the fundamental group.
n-connectivity for spaces can in turn be defined in terms of n-connectivity of maps: a space X with basepoint x0 is an n-connected space if and only if the inclusion of the basepoint is an n-connected map. The single point set is contractible, so all its homotopy groups vanish, and thus "isomorphism below n and onto at n" corresponds to the first n homotopy groups of X vanishing.
Interpretation
This is instructive for a subset: an n-connected inclusion is one such that, up to dimension n − 1, homotopies in the larger space X can be homotoped into homotopies in the subset A. For example, for an inclusion map to be 1-connected, it must be:
onto
one-to-one on and
onto
One-to-one on means that if there is a path connecting two points by passing through X, there is a path in A connecting them, while onto means that in fact a path in X is homotopic to a path in A. In other words, a function which is an isomorphism on only implies that any elements of that are homotopic in X are abstractly homotopic in A – the homotopy in A may be unrelated to the homotopy in X – while being n-connected means that homotopies in X can be pushed into homotopies in A. This gives a more concrete explanation for the utility of the definition of n-connectedness: for example, a space where the inclusion of the k-skeleton is n-connected – such as the inclusion of a point in the n-sphere – has the property that any cells in dimensions between k and n do not affect the lower-dimensional homotopy types.
Applications
The concept of n-connectedness is used in the Hurewicz theorem which describes the relation between singular homology and the higher homotopy groups. In geometric topology, cases when the inclusion of a geometrically-defined space, such as the space of immersions into a more general topological space, such as the space of all continuous maps between two associated spaces are n-connected are said to satisfy a homotopy principle or "h-principle". There are a number of powerful general techniques for proving h-principles.